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Brett Warren
By Brett Warren
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Does Australia need more migrants and future citizens?

Australia is a migration nation.

In fact, over 29 per cent of our 26 million residents were born abroad.

Share Of Australian Population That Was Born Overseas 1891 To 2021

Compared to other nations, that's big.

This is because ever since World War II ended, Australia has increasingly welcomed more migrants to the country.

Australia's migration cycles

According to Simon Kuestenmacher in his regular column in The New Daily,

"over the past decade, two-thirds of the growth in the migrant population came from Asian nations, while the European-born population declined."

He noted that migration appears in cycles.

And this is always the case.

As an example, Greeks came to Australia in the 1950s and 1960s when we needed migrants in our factories and there weren’t sufficient economic opportunities in Greece.

After the 1970s, only a few Greeks moved to Australia.

Consequently, Greek-born Aussies are old now – 74 is the most common age.

Age Profile Of The Greek And Indian Born Population In Australia

Mr Kuestenmacher commented:

"Over the past 60 years, the Greeks changed Australia for the better by filling important working-class jobs, introducing superior food, and adding columns to family homes."

The recent shift in migration patterns from Western countries to Eastern countries is best visualised by looking at the Indian-born residents of Australia.

Australian Migrant Stock

Mr Kuestenmacher explained:

"The most common age for an Indian-born resident is only 36.

Once again, these migrants fill important jobs (this time mostly in highly-skilled occupations), add to the culinary richness (curry is now a stock standard dinner option in Australia), and integrate well into Australian society as they too obsess about cricket and home ownership.

In 2001, Indians were the 10th-largest migrant group in Australia.

Today they are the second-largest group (just behind the slowly declining English).

The Greeks moved in the opposite direction (ranked 7th in 2001 and 17th in 2021)."

Migration recovery

Australia only loses population at scale (in net terms) to overseas destinations in times of extreme events.

The only other sizeable net population loss in Australia’s recent history was the outflow of international students and skilled migrants during the COVID pandemic.

Au Migration

Mr Kuestenmacher commented:

"Assuming no further world wars or pandemics, we have reason to believe pre-pandemic migration levels will return soon.

After all, Australia remains an attractive destination for migrants.

Remember what we have to offer: a stable democracy, a functioning health system, a rich English-speaking nation, a decent lifestyle and the weather isn’t too bad either.

Our rapidly ageing population isn’t only expensive, but also very labour-intensive to maintain.

We need a lot of migrants to ensure our elderly have adequate care in old age."

Granting of citizenship

There is one major tool that Australia isn’t using adequately to ensure future migrant supply – citizenship.

Immigration3

Mr Kuestenmacher shared his insights on this:

"We are making it unnecessarily expensive and bureaucratic for migrants to become Australian citizens.

Only half of the migrants that have been in the country for a decade (see 2012 in the chart below) are already citizens.

Migrants, like everyone else, want basic security in their lives.

The certainty to be allowed to stay in Australia permanently is only given once you received citizenship.

Migrants want to invest in Australia. Migrants want to know that their investments, in the form of property, taxes and columns near the front door, are not going to be taken away from them.

A transparent, less bureaucratic and cheaper way of securing citizenship might well be the key to ensuring a stable migration pipeline.

Canada is outperforming Australia here, as they started handing citizenship out to their international students like candy."

The bottom line

It appears that the whole concept of operating as a migration nation will only get more challenging in the coming decades.

As explained by Mr Kuestenmacher:

"If Australia doesn’t simplify the pathway to citizenship, we might see the share of the population that was born overseas drop slowly but steadily.

While this might sound comforting to some, our economy and older Australians in particular would be much worse off as a result."

Read the original article in The New Daily

Brett Warren
About Brett Warren Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
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